What’s the Deal with White People?

The Roy Moore saga might (or might not) finally be coming to an end. Moore lost the Senate race and he might ride his horse into the sunset. The poll results from Alabama, though, give us some puzzles to think about. We might think we understand why so many white evangelicals voted for Moore. But some other groups just don’t make sense.

As a result, white evangelical voters have been prone to cheer candidates like our current president who promise to make America great again. President Trump is not the first leader of questionable personal morality to win evangelical votes by pandering to white evangelical yearning to take the USA back to an imagined Christian past, to return the country to Winthrop’s vision.

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This is not too hard to understand, especially in the South. Any dominance oriented hierarchy of social power and authority relies on the complicity of some of its victims, typically by promising one group a privileged yet still subordinate status. This has often been noted as an explicit strategy of colonialism and industrial capitalism — give preference to one African tribe over another, white “all American” laborers over black and none or less white immigrant labor, etc. Similar observations have been made about the complicity of white women in slavery, which involved the very obvious rape of black women by their owners, in a context where even white women were essentially owned, denied basic rights, disenfranchised politically, and the concept of “marital rape” was not a reality until 1980.

Women who have been formatively acclimated to patriarchy adopt identities as woman, Americans, Southerners, Christians, etc. in which patriarchy is an essential feature and therefore makes sense. To break from this mentality is traumatic and liable to have immediate negative social and familial consequences, so most women will “vote against their interests” (in your view) precisely to shore up and hold together the very fabric of their life and world. Holding family together in this way is an extremely traditional plot line. Haven’t you read any Southern classics, like Faulkner? I’ve described this in a very theoretical way, but anyone who has lived through small town church life has seen this drama played out many times as women are pressed — and press each other — to absorb and bear up with enormous abuse, betrayal, denigration, and so forth. In most places it was much worse in the past, but that past is not so distant and much of it remains — some places more than others. This is the Deep South we’re talking about. Affirming the authority of The Man remains the center of the social, moral, and spiritual order.

I just noticed Matthew Dowd says the Alabama exit poll data shows white women overall voted for Moore 63 to 34, but when you break out Evangelical vs non-Evangelical women you get Evangelical white women 76 – 22 Moore; and non-Evangelical white women 74 – 21 Jones. I’m curious how “Non/Evangelical” was defined; in the 90s “Evangelical” was not a label Southerners, especially Baptists tended to use — it had negative (Yankee) associations. That seemed to be changing among young people though.

Pundits on the right are saying the write-ins and high support for Moore represent pro-lifers who cannot go against their core principles.

What people? CNN had a panel of Trump voters that were half Alabamans who didn’t vote for Moore. Only the southern woman, a rape victim and strong Trump supporter, believed Moore’s accusers. Only three believe Trump’s accusers are credible. Some of the men don’t know what sexual assault is, and one identified his own behaviour with Trump’s, so he excuses it and worries about witch hunts. It was a six person survey of America’s rape culture.

I was interested in why people voted one way or another. I don’t know if I could locate the ones about Trump, but one was a former beauty pageant contestant who said Trump has helped many women establish careers and supports him because of that. Someone said the media misrepresented her story and made it sound like he acted inappropriately when he didn’t. If you type in women for Trump there is plenty to watch there.
For Moore and sorry I can’t do links on my iPad, Why These Alabama Voters Are Sticking By Roy Moore (HBO) And. Why Alabama Supports Roy Moore. AJ+ The first is an evangelical focus group, and other one random people.